![]() |
Basic Information on Clothing etc.:
camisk (noun):
simple, poncho-like slave garment, about 18" wide
camisk, Turian (noun):
a style of camisk worn by slaves in the city-state of Turia; it
consists of a piece of cloth shaped like an
inverted 'T' with a beveled crossbar; it fastens
behind the neck & falls before the wearer's
body; the crossbar then passes between her
legs & is then brought forward snugly
at the hips; it is held in place by a single cord that
binds it at the back of the neck, behind the
back, & in front at the waist
chalwar (noun):
baggy pants of diaphanous silk, worn by slavegirls of the Tahari; similar
to the harem trousers of Earth
chatka (noun):
the strip of black leather, some 6 inches by 5 feet long, worn like a breech-
clout over the curla by the slavegirls of
the Wagon Peoples
curla (noun):
the red waist cord worn slave- girls of the Wagon Peoples; supports the
chatka
Cur-lon Fiber (noun):
fiber spun by the Swamp Spiders (Spider People) and used in the
textile mills of Ar
kalmak (noun): vest
of black leather worn by the slavegirls of the Wagon Peoples
kes (noun): short
tunic of black leather worn by the male slaves of the Wagon Peoples
koora (noun):
strip of red fabric worn as a headband by the slavegirls of the Wagon
Peoples
pleasure silk (noun):
sheer, clingy form of silk worn only by slavegirls; wraps like a
pareau, with a disrobing loop at the left
shoulder
repcloth (noun):
rough fabric woven from the fibers of the rep plant; analogous to cotton
muslin?
slave veil (noun):
a small triangle of diaphanous yellow silk, worn across the bridge of the
nose and covering the lower half of the face;
it parodies the heavy veils worn by free
women, as it conceals nothing and often arouses
the lust of masters
Ta-Teera (noun): a
one-piece, sleeveless, short slave garment; also called the slave rag
similar to a slave tunic, but more ragged
and revealing.
talmit (noun):
headband
Examples of different things
Slaves might wear:
(Thank You Master NorrisWarAxe)
Taken from: Savages
of GOR, pg. 145
He loosened the long, coiled
whip fastened with a snap strap at the right
of his saddle, and rose back towards us, along
the right side of the coffle
of barefoot, scantily clad, neck-chained beauties.
Taken from: Savages
of GOR, pg. 146
The red-haired girl looked well in the coffle,
moving in the grass, the chain
on her neck, in the brief slave tunic.
Taken from: Savages
of GOR, pg. 151
They had already felt that whip, through the
thin brown of their slave tunics
or across the back of their legs.
Taken from: Savages
of GOR, pg 169
She tried with her small fists, to pull together
the sides of the tunic, to
protect, as she could, the rounded, interior
contours of her softness from
the garment's apparently thoughtless disclosure.
I smiled. Did she not know
it was a slave's garment? Did she not understand
the statement that was made
by that deep, V-shaped plunging division in
the tunic, terminating only at
her belly, that the woman who wore it was
owned by men, that she was a slave?
Taken from: Savages
of GOR, pg. 214
She wore a brief garment of fringed, tanned
skin, rent and stained, doubtless
a castoff from some free woman's shirt dress,
shortened to a slave length.
Taken from: Blood
Brothers of Gor Pg. 23
I kissed the girl then, and left her behind
me. She would get dressed,
donning the brief, simple shirtdress of hide
she had been given.
Back To Gor!